A spokesperson for El Paso said the busing program, which
coordinated with Democratic mayors in receiving cities, is no longer
needed as U.S. border authorities have stopped sending migrants to
the city following the new expulsion policy.
El Paso had bused about 10,600 migrants to New York and 3,200 to
Chicago since August following higher-profile busing efforts by the
Republican governors of Texas and Arizona.
The sudden halt to El Paso's busing demonstrates the impact of U.S.
President Joe Biden's new effort to expel Venezuelans back to
Mexico. The expulsions, under a pandemic-era policy known as Title
42, aim to reduce record border arrests since Biden, a Democrat,
took office in 2021.
At the same time, Biden's administration launched a new program to
allow up to 24,000 Venezuelans with U.S. sponsors to apply for
humanitarian entry by air. Venezuelans who cross into the United
States, Mexico or Panama illegally are ineligible.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Chris Magnus told
Bloomberg News on Thursday that U.S. border agents had encountered
just 155 Venezuelans on Wednesday, down from a daily average of
1,200 earlier this month.
At a shelter in the U.S. border city of Deming, New Mexico,
Venezuelans went from being the most common nationality to absent,
according to Ariana Saludares, executive director of Colores United,
which runs the center.
On Thursday, a U.S. government bus transporting migrants from El
Paso to the shelter to alleviate overcrowding instead carried about
50 Colombians, Ecuadorians, Peruvians, Dominicans, and Nicaraguans,
she said.
More than 4,500 Venezuelans have been returned to Mexico since the
new U.S. expulsion policy began on Oct. 12, the Mexican government
said, straining shelters there.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington and Paul Ratje in Deming, New
Mexico; Additional reporting by Lizbeth Diaz in Mexico City; Editing
by Richard Pullin and Stephen Coates)
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